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if i look back, i am lost
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@hutzovina
Noah Dao
is it wildly obvious that the Backrooms movie is about rumination, or am I dumb and wrong?
"Play is older than culture, for culture, however inadequately defined, always presupposes human society, and animals have not waited for man to teach them their playing."
From Homo Ludens: A Study of the Play-Element in Culture by Johan Huizinga, 1938
Acanthus (1879-1881) by William Morris.
Watercolour for wallpaper design.
Birmingham Museums Trust, licensed under CC0
Qui probe dissimulare scit, Dissimilem quasi esse. Who knows how to dissimulate honestly is, so to speak, “dissimilar.” - Rudolf Gottfried von Knichen, Opus Politicum 507A
Unknown, Lava Spout, 20th century
if you like
Something reminded us of you a while ago and so I texted you, but I don’t think your old number works anymore. I also don’t know if you remember me lmao
just DM me! :)
William Morris, Father of the Arts and Crafts Movement
William Morris’s Flowers was written by Rowan Bain, Principal Curator of the William Morris Gallery, London, and published by Thames and Hudson in association with the Victoria and Albert Museum in 2019. The book focuses on the original carpet, wallpaper, and fabric patterns Morris created over his lifetime and Bain attributes about 600 finished and unfinished patterns to Morris.
William Morris (1834-1896) was a textile artist heavily associated with both the Arts and Craft movement in Britain and the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. Following his final year at college, Morris and his friend Edward Burne-Jones (1833-1898), also a member of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, swore they would dedicate their lives to becoming artists. Jones did, in fact, become a more “traditional” artist (by that I mean paint on canvas—this does not mean that Burne-Jones was more of a "True" artist than Morris) but Morris found himself drawn more to creating art through interior design. He would eventually establish Morris & Co. (originally named Morris, Marshall, Faulkner & Co.) in 1861, which became a well-known textile company in 19th century Britain. Morris & Co. can still be found selling patterns today, many of which are the same patterns William Morris himself designed.
Morris’s inspirations came primarily from nature, which can very easily be seen in the winding flowers, vines, and leaves that make up his designs. He was critical of the society he lived in and how the rapid industrialization was destroying what he referred to as Britain’s “green and pleasant land.” This anxiety Morris held seemed to propel his interest in capturing the beauty of nature in his prints and to remind those who furnished their homes with his flowers that these images will be all that remains if Britain’s industrialization was not challenged.
View other posts related to William Morris.
View more posts on the Arts and Crafts Movement.
– Olivia, Special Collections Graduate Art History Fieldworker
When are you coming to visit the us?
Why anonymous? Who are you? DM me, dude :)
Sir Peter Scott
'Early'. Evgeny Lushpin. 2019.
Art nouveau flower shop, Brussels
View of l'Hermitage, Jallais Hills, Pontoise (1867) by Camille Pissarro
Basel, Switzerland, 2025
"Hypocrisy is a tribute vice pays to virtue"
La Rochefoucauld, from Maxims